Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (Menkes)
1,057 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We sought to identify novel genes involved in intestinal iron absorption by inducing iron deficiency in rats during postnatal development from the suckling period through adulthood. We then performed comparative gene chip analyses (RAE230A and RAE230B chips; Affymetrix) with cRNA derived from duodenal mucosa. Real-time PCR was used to confirm changes in gene expression. Genes encoding the apical iron transport-related proteins [divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) and duodenal cytochrome b] were strongly induced at all ages studied, whereas increases in mRNA encoding the basolateral proteins iron-regulated gene 1 and hephaestin were observed only by real-time PCR. In addition, transferrin receptor 1 and heme oxygenase 1 were induced. We also identified induction of novel genes not previously associated with intestinal iron transport. The Menkes copper ATPase (ATP7a) and metallothionein were strongly induced at all ages studied, suggesting increased copper absorption by enterocytes during iron deficiency. We also found significantly increased liver copper levels in 7- to 12-wk-old iron-deficient rats. Also upregulated at most ages examined were the sodium-dependent vitamin C transporter, tripartite motif protein 27, aquaporin 4, lipocalin-interacting membrane receptor, and the breast cancer-resistance protein (ABCG2). Some genes also showed decreased expression with iron deprivation, including several membrane transporters, metabolic enzymes, and genes involved in the oxidative stress response. We speculate that dietary iron deprivation leads to increased intestinal copper absorption via DMT1 on the brush-border membrane and the Menkes copper ATPase on the basolateral membrane. These findings may thus explain copper loading in the iron-deficient state. We also demonstrate that many other novel genes may be differentially regulated in the setting of iron deprivation.
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PMID:Identification of differentially expressed genes in response to dietary iron deprivation in rat duodenum. 1563 78

Previous studies revealed novel genetic changes in the duodenal mucosa of iron-deprived rats during postnatal development. These observations are now extended to compare the genetic response to iron deficiency in the duodenum versus jejunum of 12-wk-old rats. cRNA samples were prepared from the duodenal and jejunal mucosa of three groups each of control and iron-deficient rats and hybridized with RAE 230A and 230B gene chips (Affymetrix). Stringent data reduction strategies were employed. Results showed that several genes were similarly induced in both gut segments, including DMT1, Dcytb, transferrin receptor 1, heme oxygenase 1, metallothionein, the Menkes copper ATPase (ATP7A), tripartitie motif protein 27, and the sodium-dependent vitamin C transporter. However, a subset of genes showed regulation in only one or the other gut segment. In duodenum only, gastrokine 1, trefoil factor 1 and claudin 2 were induced by iron-deficiency. Other genes previously identified were only regulated in the duodenum. Overall, these studies demonstrate similarities and distinct differences in the genetic response to iron deprivation in the duodenum versus jejunum and provide evidence that more distal gut segments also may play a role in increasing iron absorption in iron-deficiency anemia.
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PMID:Gene chip analyses reveal differential genetic responses to iron deficiency in rat duodenum and jejunum. 1662 62